Igor Mokrousov, 1 * Olga Narvskaya, 1 Tatiana Otten, 2 Elena Limeschenko, 1 Lidia Steklova, 3 and Boris Vyshnevskiy 2

Similar documents
Genetic Polymorphism at Codon 463 in the katg Gene in Isoniazid-Sensitive and -Resistant Isolates of Mycobacterium tuberculosis from the Middle East

Primary Multi Drug Resistance in New Pulmonary Tuberculosis Patients in Western Uttar Pradesh, India

Department of Microbiology, Faculty of Medicine, Kuwait University, Kuwait

Rapid genotypic assays to identify drug-resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis in South Africa

The Efficacy of Genotype MTBDRplus Assay in Rapid Detection of Rifampicin and Isoniazid Resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis Complex Isolates

Tuberculosis Elimination, National Center for HIV, STD and TB Prevention, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA, USA

Molecular Typing of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Based on Variable Number of Tandem DNA Repeats Used Alone and in Association with Spoligotyping

ORIGINAL ARTICLE /j x

Genotypic analysis of multidrug-resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolates from Monterrey, Mexico

Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Molecular Epidemiology: An Overview

DRUG RESISTANCE IN TUBERCULOSIS

Diagnosis of drug resistant TB

A simple, rapid and economic method for detecting multidrug-resistant tuberculosis

Molecular tests for rapid detection of rifampicin and isoniazid resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis.

Multi-clonal origin of macrolide-resistant Mycoplasma pneumoniae isolates. determined by multiple-locus variable-number tandem-repeat analysis

Comparative Evaluation of Ligation-Mediated PCR and Spoligotyping as Screening Methods for Genotyping of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Strains

Research Article Use of Genotype MTBDRplus Assay for Diagnosis of Multidrug-Resistant Tuberculosis in Nepal

A. Nusrath Unissa, N. Selvakumar, Sujatha Narayanan, C. Suganthi, and L. E. Hanna

Characterization of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Isolates from Patients in Houston, Texas, by Spoligotyping

Received 11 June 2004/Returned for modification 13 August 2004/Accepted 15 September 2004

Molecular Characterization of Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Rv/Ra Variants: Distinguishing the Mycobacterial Laboratory Strain

The New England Journal of Medicine EXOGENOUS REINFECTION AS A CAUSE OF RECURRENT TUBERCULOSIS AFTER CURATIVE TREATMENT

PCR-Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism for Rapid, Low-Cost Identification of Isoniazid-Resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis

katg Mutation of Isoniazid-Resistant Isolated from Tuberculosis Patients

Transmissibility, virulence and fitness of resistant strains of M. tuberculosis. CHIANG Chen-Yuan MD, MPH, DrPhilos

High Incidence of the Beijing Genotype among Multidrug-Resistant Isolates of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in a Tertiary Care Center in Mumbai, India

Filipa Matos, Mónica V. Cunha*, Ana Canto, Teresa Albuquerque, Alice Amado, and. INRB, I.P./LNIV- Laboratório Nacional de Investigação Veterinária

Usefulness of Spoligotyping To Discriminate IS6110 Low-Copy- Number Mycobacterium tuberculosis Complex Strains Cultured in Denmark

Global epidemiology of drug-resistant tuberculosis. Factors contributing to the epidemic of MDR/XDR-TB. CHIANG Chen-Yuan MD, MPH, DrPhilos

Received 12 June 2002/Returned for modification 31 July 2002/Accepted 2 September 2002

Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis: rapid detection of resistance to rifampin and high or low levels of isoniazid in clinical specimens and isolates

PCR-RFLP for rapid, low-cost identification of isoniazid-resistant Mycobacterium ACCEPTED

Molecular Epidemiology of Tuberculosis. Kathy DeRiemer, PhD, MPH School of Medicine University of California, Davis

Multiplex PCR for Rapid Detection of Rifampin and Isoniazid Resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis Isolated from Bandung, Indonesia

Jillian Dormandy, BS; Akos Somoskovi, MD, PhD; Barry N. Kreiswirth, PhD; Jeffrey R. Driscoll, PhD; David Ashkin, MD; and Max Salfinger, MD

Spread of Drug-Resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis Strains of the Beijing Genotype in the Archangel Oblast, Russia

Rapid detection of mutations in rpob gene of rifampicin resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains by line probe assay

Molecular Characterization of Isoniazid-Resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis Isolates Collected in Australia

Genomic Characterization of an Endemic Mycobacterium tuberculosis Strain: Evolutionary and Epidemiologic Implications

PATTERNS OF DRUG RESISTANCE AND RFLP ANALYSIS OF MYCOBACTERIUM TUBERCULOSIS STRAINS ISOLATED FROM RECURRENT TUBERCULOSIS PATIENTS IN SRI LANKA

Polymorphism of Variable-Number Tandem Repeats at Multiple Loci in Mycobacterium tuberculosis

Validation of the GenoType MTBDRplus assay for diagnosis of multidrug resistant tuberculosis in South Vietnam

Detection of Mutations Associated with Isoniazid Resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis Isolates from China

MULTIDRUG- RESISTANT TUBERCULOSIS. Dean Tsukayama Hennepin County Medical Center Hennepin County Public Health Clinic

VNTR . VNTR. VNTR. (Original Article) PCR-RFLP ( ETR-B, ETR-C, ETR-D, ETR-E, ETR-F : 7 .VNTR : : (Atypical Mycobacteria)

Isoniazid MIC and KatG Gene Mutations among Mycobacterium tuberculosis Isolates in Northwest of Iran

Genotypic characteristics of Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolated from household contacts of tuberculosis patients in the Philippines

TB 101 Disease, Clinical Assessment and Lab Testing

Expanded Geographical Distribution of the N Family of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Strains within the United States

Use of Genetic Distance as a Measure of Ongoing Transmission of Mycobacterium tuberculosis

Molecular Evidence for Heterogeneity of the Multiple-Drug-Resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis Population in Scotland (1990 to 1997)

Received 24 August 2007/Returned for modification 17 October 2007/Accepted 27 November 2007

Multidrug resistance (MDR) epitomises. Mechanisms of heteroresistance to isoniazid and rifampin of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in Tashkent, Uzbekistan

India accounts for 30% of tuberculosis (TB) cases

Molecular diagnosis of MDR-TB using GenoType MTBDRplus 96 assay in Ibadan, Nigeria

Rapid Diagnosis and Detection of Drug Resistance in Tuberculosis

Optimal Combination of VNTR Typing for Discrimination of Isolated Mycobacterium tuberculosis in Korea

Molecular Methods in the Diagnosis of Drug Resistant Tuberculosis. Dr Sahajal Dhooria

BMC Infectious Diseases

Spread of Drug-Resistant Pulmonary Tuberculosis in Estonia

Molecular Analysis of Isoniazid and Rifampin Resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis Isolates Recovered from Barcelona ABSTRACT

Prevalence and molecular characteristics of drug-resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis in Beijing, China: 2006 versus 2012

Genotyping of Multidrug-Resistant Strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in the Limpopo Province. Kgasha Matete Olga

Received 6 November 1996/Accepted 28 February 1997

MIRU-VNTR.. (HGI) HunterGaston Discriminatory Index MIRU-VNTR :

katg Gene as a Surrogate Molecular Marker Leading to Cause Drug Resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis Isolates

Rapid detection of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis

Tuberculosis Disparity Between US-born African-Americans and Caucasians in Houston:

Drug Resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis Isolates from Northeastern Sudan

Genetic diversity of Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolates from Beijing, China assessed by Spoligotyping, LSPs and VNTR profiles

Strain differentiation of Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex isolated from sputum of pulmonary tuberculosis patients

Prevalence of Haarlem I and Beijing types of Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains in Iranian and Afghan MDR-TB patients

How Is TB Transmitted? Sébastien Gagneux, PhD 20 th March, 2008

Clonal Expansion of a Globally Disseminated Lineage of Mycobacterium tuberculosis with Low IS6110 Copy Numbers

Drug-Susceptible Mycobacterium tuberculosis Beijing Genotype Does Not Develop Mutation-Conferred Resistance to Rifampin at an Elevated Rate

6110-Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism Analysis, Spoligotyping, Variable Number of Tandem DNA Repeats and

Received 2 May 2008/Returned for modification 12 June 2008/Accepted 28 July 2008

Utility of New 24-Locus Variable-Number Tandem-Repeat Typing for Discriminating Mycobacterium tuberculosis Clinical Isolates Collected in Bulgaria

Treatment of Active Tuberculosis

DNA FINGERPRINTING. Barry N. Kreiswirth, PhD Director, PHRI TB Center

Beijing/w and major spoligotype families of Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains isolated from tuberculosis patients in Eastern Turkey

At Baltic crossroads: a molecular snapshot of Mycobacterium tuberculosis population diversity in Kaliningrad, Russia

Distribution of the Beijing Family Genotypes of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in Taiwan

OUT-TB Web. Ontario Universal Typing of Tuberculosis: Surveillance and Communication System

Multi-drug Resistant Tuberculosis in Rajshahi District

Received 16 July 2002/Returned for modification 23 October 2002/Accepted 17 November 2002

CDC s Approach to Fast Track Laboratory Diagnosis for Persons at Risk of Drug Resistant TB: Molecular Detection of Drug Resistance (MDDR) Service

Drug Resistant Tuberculosis Biology, Epidemiology and Control Dr. Christopher Dye

Qian Gao Fudan University

Mutations Prevalent among Rifampin- and Isoniazid-Resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis Isolates from a Hospital in Vietnam

Global Perspective on Transmission: Value in Genotype Mapping of Disease Transmission Dynamics

Characterization of Mutations in the Rpob and Katg Gene of Mycobacterium Tuberculosis Isolates From Pasteur Institute of Tehran

A ten-year evolution of a multidrugresistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) outbreak in an HIV-negative context, Tunisia ( )

Extremely high prevalence of multidrug resistant tuberculosis in Murmansk, Russia: a population-based study

Rapid Detection of Rifampin Resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis Isolates from India and Mexico by a Molecular Beacon Assay

Detection of heteroresistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis by pyrosequencing

Drug resistance-conferring mutations in Mycobacterium tuberculosis from Madang, Papua New Guinea

A Rapid and Sensitive Chip-based Assay for Detection of rpob Gene Mutations Conferring Rifampicin Resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis (TB).

Transcription:

ANTIMICROBIAL AGENTS AND CHEMOTHERAPY, May 2002, p. 1417 1424 Vol. 46, No. 5 0066-4804/02/$04.00 0 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.46.5.1417 1424.2002 Copyright 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved. High Prevalence of KatG Ser315Thr Substitution among Isoniazid- Resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis Clinical Isolates from Northwestern Russia, 1996 to 2001 Igor Mokrousov, 1 * Olga Narvskaya, 1 Tatiana Otten, 2 Elena Limeschenko, 1 Lidia Steklova, 3 and Boris Vyshnevskiy 2 Laboratory of Molecular Microbiology, St. Petersburg Pasteur Institute, 1 Microbiology Laboratory, The Research Institute of Phthisiopulmonology, 2 and City Anti-Tuberculosis Dispensary, 3 St. Petersburg, Russia Received 2 July 2001/Returned for modification 19 September 2001/Accepted 4 February 2002 A total of 204 isoniazid (INH)-resistant strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolated from different patients in the northwestern region of Russia from 1996 to 2001 were screened by a PCR-restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) assay. This assay uses HapII cleavage of an amplified fragment of the katg gene to detect the transversion 315AGC3ACC (Ser3Thr), which is associated with INH resistance. This analysis revealed a 93.6% prevalence of the katg S315T mutation in strains from patients with both newly and previously diagnosed cases of tuberculosis (TB). This mutation was not found in any of 57 INH-susceptible isolates included in the study. The specificity of the assay was 100%; all isolates that contained the S315T mutation were classified as resistant by a culture-based susceptibility testing method. The Beijing genotype, defined by IS6110-RFLP analysis and the spacer oligonucleotide typing (spoligotyping) method, was found in 60.3% of the INH-resistant strains studied. The katg S315T shift was more prevalent among Beijing genotype strains than among non-beijing genotype strains: 97.8 versus 84.6%, respectively, for all isolates, including those from patients with new and previously diagnosed cases, isolated from 1999 to 2001 and 100.0 versus 86.5%, respectively, for isolates from patients with new cases isolated from 1996 to 2001. The design of this PCR-RFLP assay allows the rapid and unambiguous identification of the katg 315ACC mutant allele. The simplicity of the assay permits its implementation into routine practice in clinical microbiology laboratories in regions with a high incidence of TB where this mutation is predominant, including northwestern Russia. * Corresponding author. Mailing address: Pasteur Institute, 14, Mira St., St. Petersburg, 197101, Russia. Phone: 7 812 233 21 49. Fax: 7 812 232 92 17. E-mail: miv@im4520.spb.edu. The last decade of the 20th century was marked by the reemergence and epidemic spread of tuberculosis (TB) in the Russian Federation. In 1999, the prevalence of tuberculosis in the northwestern region of Russia, including St. Petersburg, with a total population of about 14 million, was estimated to be 278.2 per 100,000 population, the incidence was estimated to be 68.1 per 100,000 population, and the mortality rate was estimated to be 9.4 per 100,000 population. Coincident with the reemergence of TB has been the emergence of multipledrug-resistant (MDR) Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains. MDR M. tuberculosis strains are generally considered those resistant to at least rifampin (RIF) and isoniazid (INH). These drugs are recommended by the World Health Organization DOTS (directly observed therapy, short course) regimen (40) and are used in the standard treatment protocol officially adopted by the Russian Ministry of Health (18). Resistance to RIF in M. tuberculosis has been associated with mutations in rpob, the gene coding for the subunit of RNA polymerase, the main target of RIF (28). It has been demonstrated that 95 to 98% of resistant isolates have mutations in rpob. Ninety-five percent of the mutations are located in a core region of rpob (22). This implies that rather elaborate and expensive methods like sequencing, the line probe assay, and assays that use microarrays are required to identify these mutations (3). Unlike RIF resistance, INH resistance is apparently controlled by a more complex genetic system that involves several genes (22, 25). However, extensive studies have demonstrated that INH resistance is most frequently associated with a single mutation in katg, a gene that encodes the catalase-peroxidase enzyme in M. tuberculosis. INH is a prodrug and requires catalytic activation to be converted into its active form. The M. tuberculosis catalase-peroxidase enzyme has been shown to accomplish this function (4). Early studies showed that complete deletion of the gene is rare, likely due to the importance of its peroxidase component for cell viability (7, 19, 28). For this reason the predominant mode of acquisition of resistance via katg alterations is the selection of particular mutations that decrease the catalase activity but that maintain a certain level of the peroxidase activity of the enzyme in viable INH-resistant (INH r ) organisms. Such mutations were found in up to 90% of the INH r strains. One particular substitution in codon 315, AGC3ACC (Ser3Thr), was reported to be the most frequent. This mutation appears to provide the optimal balance between decreased catalase activity and a sufficiently high level of peroxidase activity in KatG (22). The phenotypic level of resistance of such strains is typically in the intermediate range (1 to 2 g/ml) (25). Also, InhA (enoyl-acp-reductase), a protein involved in mycolic acid and subsequent cell wall biosyntheses, was identified as a main target of INH, and the mutations linked to the INH resistance phenotype were described in two regions of the inha locus. The mutations in the putative promoter region upstream of orf1-inha are thought to increase the level of InhA protein expression, thereby elevating the drug target levels and pro- 1417

1418 MOKROUSOV ET AL. ANTIMICROB. AGENTS CHEMOTHER. FIG. 1. Schematic illustration of the katg 200-bp fragment amplified with primers katg1f and katg4rb. Vertical thin arrows indicate HapII restriction sites (CCGG); the bold arrow marks codon 315, where the AGC3ACC transversion creates an additional HapII site in INH r M. tuberculosis strains. Horizontal double-headed arrows represent the principal HapII digestion products resulting from different katg codon 315 alleles. ducing INH resistance by a drug titration mechanism (15). The inha mutations which change the NADH binding site of InhA most affected by INH were also described in resistant isolates (23). Two other genes related to INH resistance have recently been suggested: the kasa gene, which encodes another INH target, -ketoacyl-acp-synthase, and the regulatory region of the ahpc gene, which encodes alkylhydroperoxidase. Mutations in these genes seem to provide a supplementary mechanism of resistance and need further investigation (10, 11, 22, 27). In a previous study (12), we showed a high prevalence of the katg S315T substitution among 24 INH r M. tuberculosis strains recovered from November 1993 to March 1995 in the St. Petersburg area of Russia. For the present study we extended the surveillance to the years 1996 to 2001. We screened a representative selection of INH r M. tuberculosis isolates recovered from patients in northwestern Russia from 1996 to 2001 for the presence of the katg S315T mutation. We also analyzed the frequency of the S315T shift in different patient groups and isolates of different M. tuberculosis genotypes (strains). MATERIALS AND METHODS M. tuberculosis isolates and susceptibility testing. A total of 261 strains recovered from 261 different adult patients (age range, 15 to 63 years) were studied. Some of these patients (n 139) had newly diagnosed pulmonary TB, and others had previously been diagnosed with pulmonary TB and had active TB during the surveillance period for the present study. These patients originated from St. Petersburg and three neighboring provinces of northwestern Russia (Leningrad Oblast, Novgorod, and Pskov) and were admitted to the hospital of the St. Petersburg Institute of Phthisiopulmonology and the City Anti-Tuberculosis Dispensary of St. Petersburg between 1996 and 2001. According to the World Health Organization definition, TB in a patient who had not received antituberculous treatment for more than 1 month was considered a new case of TB (40). For each patient, only the first available isolate was included in the study. Löwenstein-Jensen medium was used for cultivation of isolates, and susceptibility testing was performed by the absolute concentration method, as recommended by the Russian Ministry of Health (Order No. 558 of 28 June 1978) and as has been described previously (38). A microbial suspension containing 5 10 8 organisms/ml was prepared according to McFarland turbidity standards and was diluted 1:10; then, 0.2 ml of the dilution was added to Löwenstein-Jensen medium with or without a drug. The culture tubes were incubated at 37 C, and growth was monitored after 3 weeks of incubation and assessed as described previously (39). An isolate was considered resistant when bacterial growth occurred in the presence of a concentration of 1 g of INH per ml, 20 g ofrif per ml, 5 g of streptomycin (STR) per ml, 2 g of ethambutol per ml, and 100 g of pyrazinamide (ph 5.6) per ml. The method of absolute concentration was previously shown in a comparative study with the National Mycobacterial Reference Laboratory in Turku, Finland, to give results concordant with those generated by the proportion method in our setting (38). PCR-RFLP analysis. DNA preparations were obtained as described by van Embden et al. (32) or Mazars et al. (14). Amplification of the fragment with katg codon 315 (the fragment in katg from positions 904 to 1103; http://genolist.pasteur.fr/tuberculist) was performed in a PTC-100 thermal controller (MJ Research, Inc.) with primers katg1f (5 -AGCTCGTATGGCACCGGAAC) and katg4rb (5 -AACGGGTCCGGGATGGTG) in 30 l of a PCR mixture (15 pmol of each primer, 1.5 mm MgCl 2,1Uofrecombinant Taq DNA polymerase [Amersham Pharmacia Biotech], 200 M each deoxynucleoside triphosphate) under the following conditions: initial denaturation at 95 C for 4 min; 30 cycles of 94 C for 1 min, 61 C for 1 min, and 72 C for 1 min; and a final elongation at 72 C for 4 min. The amplified fragment was assessed by electrophoresis in a 1.5% agarose gel and was cleaved with HapII (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) according to the instructions of the manufacturer. The restriction fragments obtained were electrophoresed in a 1.5% agarose gel and were visualized under UV light on a transilluminator. This PCR-restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) assay was designed to detect the katg codon mutation AGC(Ser)3 ACC(Thr), which leads to the INH resistance phenotype. This mutation creates an additional HapII site (CCGG) and thus can be detected by use of this restriction endonuclease. The primers were selected to amplify a rather short 200-bp katg fragment spanning codon 315 in order to avoid interference with other HapII sites situated in the proximity of this region that would otherwise have produced additional screening fragments (Fig. 1). Time-consuming excision of the product from the gel and purification procedures were omitted in our study, and the PCR product was directly subjected to HapII cleavage. As a result, the longest RFLP product obtained was 132 bp for the INH r strain with a mutated 315ACC allele and 153 bp for the katg codon 315 wild type or differently mutated allele. These indicative bands could be clearly discriminated by 1.5% agarose minigel electrophoresis: they were the only visible bands, while the shorter 10- to 21-bp bands (Fig. 1) ran out of the gel. Figure 2 presents the different typical profiles generated by this PCR-RFLP assay. Theoretically, by this assay one could also detect heteroresistance (a mixed population of INH r strains with 315ACC and INH-susceptible [INH s ] M. tuberculosis strains), as both bands (bands of 132 and 153 bp) are clearly distinguishable in a single lane (Fig. 2, lane 8). Control reactions for the detection of false-positive results due to possible contamination with previously amplified amplicons were performed as follows. A negative control sample (distilled water) was included in each PCR run; no contamination was detected. DNA fingerprinting. The DNA of the strains studied was also subjected to IS6110 RFLP typing (32) and spacer oligonucleotide typing (spoligotyping) (8), as described previously. The IS6110 RFLP assay patterns were compared, and a dendrogram was constructed with the GelCompar (version 4.1) package (BVBI Applied Maths, Kortrijk, Belgium) by the unweighted pair group method of arithmetic averages by using the Dice coefficient. FIG. 2. Gel electrophoresis of the amplified katg fragment and the products of its digestion by HapII. Lanes: 1, 2, 3, and 6, products obtained by HapII digestion of katg of INH r strains with mutated katg (315ACC); 4, 5, and 7, products obtained by HapII digestion of katg of strains not harboring the katg AGC3ACC mutation at codon 315; 8, artificially mixed digests of PCR products from both wild-type and ACC alleles of katg codon 315; 9, undigested amplified 200-bp katg fragment; M, 100-bp DNA ladder (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech).

VOL. 46, 2002 KatG315 SUBSTITUTION IN INH r M. TUBERCULOSIS 1419 TABLE 1. Susceptibility profiles of INH r M. tuberculosis strains Patient group No. of strains a H SH SR HR SHR SHE SHRE SHRZ SHREZ Total Patients with newly diagnosed TB 3 22 0 0 45 1 8 8 5 92 Patients with previously diagnosed TB 1 9 1 1 75 0 6 15 4 112 Total 4 31 1 1 120 1 14 23 9 204 a Drug resistance abbreviations: S, STR; R, RIF; H, INH; E, ethambutol, Z, pyrazinamide. RESULTS A total of 204 INH r isolates and 57 INH s isolates from 261 different patients were examined. Of the INH r strains, 112 were from patients who had active TB during the surveillance period from 1996 to 2001 but who had previously (from 1974 to 1995) been diagnosed with TB and 92 were from patients with newly diagnosed cases. The distributions of the susceptibility profiles of the INH r strains among the different patient groups are presented in Table 1. Interestingly, 200 of the 204 (98.0%) INH r strains were also resistant to streptomycin; four strains were INH monoresistant (3 of these INH-monoresistant strains were isolated from patients with new cases [Table 1]). The 57 randomly selected INH s strains included in the study showed the following resistance profiles: 39 were susceptible to all drugs tested, 10 were resistant to streptomycin alone, 1 was resistant to pyrazinamide, 1 was resistant to RIF only, and 6 were resistant to both streptomycin and RIF. None of these isolates exhibited the katg S315T mutation. Since other rarely described mutations in codon 315 confer INH resistance (22, 25), we assume that these INH s strains had a wild-type allele at codon 315 (AGC). A discrepancy between the results of phenotypic and genotypic drug resistance testing was found for three strains that were phenotypically identified as INH susceptible but that had the S315T mutation. These DNA samples were retested by PCR-RFLP analysis, and the prior results were confirmed. Phenotypic susceptibility testing was repeated for the same isolates, and they were proved to be resistant. For further analysis, the final phenotypic test result was considered correct for these three strains. The results of the PCR-RFLP assay of INH r isolates are summarized in Table 2. Analysis of the distribution of the katg 315ACC allele showed that it was highly prevalent in strains from patients with both previously diagnosed and new cases: 92.9 and 94.6%, respectively. As MDR is defined as resistance to at least RIF and INH and because almost all the isolates (200 of 204) were STR resistant, we subdivided the strains into two groups: INH r and RIF s strains and INH r and RIF r strains. There was essentially no difference in the frequency of this mutation between MDR (INH r and RIF r, 94.6%) and INH r and RIF s (89.7%) strains. Taken together, these data indicate that in our setting the specificity and sensitivity of this PCR- RFLP assay for the detection of INH resistance were 100 and 93.6%, respectively. Two standardized DNA fingerpinting techniques, spoligotyping (8) and IS6110 RFLP typing (32), were used to differentiate the strains in order to assess their genetic relatedness. Forty-one different profiles were obtained by spoligotyping (Table 3), and the profiles were compared with those in the spoligotype database of Sola et al. (26). A distinctive pattern that consisted of signals 35 to 43 was shared by the majority (121 of 204) of strains. This nine-signature-signal spoligotyping profile (spoligoprofile) (Table 3, type R0 and 1) is typical of the Beijing family genotype (26, 35). Two strains showed incomplete Beijing profiles that lacked single signals 37 and 40 (Table 3, type R33 and types R34 and 190, respectively). Other than Beijing types, the 38 particular spoligotypes included from 1 to 11 strains (Table 3). The 85 drug-resistant isolates from patients with newly diagnosed TB were subjected to IS6110 RFLP fingerprinting; the profiles obtained were used to con- TABLE 2. Frequency of katg 315ACC allele among 204 INH-resistant M. tuberculosis strains revealed by PCR-RFLP analysis Phenotype and patient group No. of strains with 315ACC allele/total no. of strains tested 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 Total % Strains with 315ACC allele INH r 29/30 28/30 84/92 50/52 191/204 93.6 Previously diagnosed cases 23/24 21/22 31/37 29/29 104/112 92.9 INH r and RIF s 0/0 7/7 2/3 2/2 11/12 INH r and RIF r 23/24 14/15 29/34 27/27 93/100 New cases 6/6 7/8 53/55 21/23 87/92 94.6 INH r and RIF s 1/1 2/2 15/16 6/8 24/27 INH r and RIF r 5/5 5/6 38/39 15/15 63/65 Beijing genotype 11/12 17/18 54/56 36/36 118/122 96.7 Other genotypes 18/18 11/12 30/36 14/16 73/82 89.0 New cases, Beijing genotype 3/3 4/4 34/34 14/14 55/55 100.0 New cases, other genotypes 3/3 3/4 19/21 7/9 32/37 86.5

1420 MOKROUSOV ET AL. ANTIMICROB. AGENTS CHEMOTHER. TABLE 3. Schematic representation of spoligoprofiles of the M. tuberculosis strains studied a Spoligoprofile Type b Reference no. c No. of strains a The boldface numbers represent the spoligotypes of the Beijing family. b Arbitrary code accepted in our laboratory. c Spoligotype from the database of Sola et al. (26). struct a dendrogram (Fig. 3). A total of 18 different IS6110 RFLP profiles were identified among the 52 strains of the Beijing family (Fig. 3, spoligotypes R0 and 1); these profiles clustered at a level of 80% similarity (Dice coefficient). In particular, two distinct profiles within the Beijing cluster were shared: one by 22 strains and the other by 12 strains (Fig. 3). Thirty-two different IS6110 RFLP profiles were identified among 33 strains of genotypes other than the Beijing genotype. The number of copies of IS6110 per isolate ranged from 14 to 19 for the Beijing family strains and from 7 to 14 for strains of the other genotypes (Fig. 3). DISCUSSION This study was undertaken to gain further insight into the molecular basis of the INH resistance of M. tuberculosis clinical strains circulating in northwestern Russia. The majority of R0 1 121 R2 53 4 R8 253 2 R9 50 1 R11 42 8 R12 161 1 R14 252 11 R16 35 2 R19 4 R21 1 R22 1 R23 237 1 R24 251 2 R26 1 R27 2 R28 2 R29 1 R30 254 6 R31 1 R32 1 R33 1 R34 190 1 R38 1 R39 191 2 R40 1 R41 1 R42 47 3 R43 1 R44 2 1 R45 1 R46 2 R48 1 R49 1 R50 2 R51 2 R52 2 R53 1 R54 1 R55 1 R56 1 R57 1 INH r strains collected over the entire study period (1996 to 2001) from both patients with previously diagnosed cases of TB (89.3%) and patients with new cases of TB (71.7%) showed the triple-drug-resistance profile (resistance to STR, INH, and RIF) (Table 1). Nearly the same percentages were observed for the 3-year period from 1999 to 2001: 92.4 and 69.2% for patients with previously diagnosed and new TB cases, respectively (Table 2). In general, the resistance profiles corroborated the expected pattern of acquisition of resistance to particular drugs, i.e., INH resistance preceding resistance to RIF. The high prevalence of STR resistance (200 of 204 INH r strains; Table 1) is a feature characteristic of the current TB epidemic in Russia and may be explained by overuse of the drug for treatment of other nontuberculous diseases and poor adherence to treatment protocols. Furthermore, STR was invariably used for TB treatment in prisons, and many prisoners were released back into society in the 1990s.

VOL. 46, 2002 KatG315 SUBSTITUTION IN INH r M. TUBERCULOSIS 1421 FIG. 3. Dendrogram obtained by the IS6110 RFLP assay-based unweighted pair group method of arithmetic averages for the drug-resistant M. tuberculosis clinical isolates from patients with new cases of TB. The Beijing cluster is in the shaded area. The positions of the bands in each lane are adjusted (normalized) so that the band positions for all strains are comparable. The scale on the left depicts similarity coefficients, which are defined elsewhere (32); the scale on the right (shaded) shows band sizes (in kilobase pairs) obtained by the IS6110 RFLP assay. The presence of the mutation at katg codon 315 (AGC3ACC) is indicated by an asterisk. Drug resistance abbreviations: S, STR; R, RIF; H, INH; E, ethambutol, Z, pyrazinamide. Our results on the variation at katg codon 315 (Table 2) are in concordance with data published by other researchers. The prevalence of the katg S315T substitution in M. tuberculosis strains from around the world varies, especially with regard to the prevalence of TB. In the regions where the prevalence of TB is intermediate and low, this mutation has been reported relatively infrequently: in 26 to 30% of isolates in Singapore (11) and Madrid (19) and rarely in isolates from Scotland (6)

1422 MOKROUSOV ET AL. ANTIMICROB. AGENTS CHEMOTHER. and Finland (13). In contrast, the S315T mutation accounted for INH resistance in 52 to 64% of strains in Africa (4, 7, 37), 79% of strains in Peru (5), 91% of strains in Russia (24 strains studied in 1993 to 1994 [12]), and 58% of strains in New York City (19). The present study demonstrated the high prevalence of the 315ACC mutant allele among M. tuberculosis isolates in an area of northwestern Russia: in 93 to 100% of INH r isolates, depending on the patient group and genotype, versus an average of 60 to 65% isolates in other countries with a high prevalence of TB. It may be explained by noncompliance in some patient groups (e.g., homeless persons, refugees, and drug abusers) and a lack of resources for TB control programs in different regions of Russia (18). We also investigated the distribution of the katg S315T mutation among different strains of M. tuberculosis by molecular typing. Two different typing methods were used: IS6110 RFLP analysis and direct repeat (DR)-based spoligotyping. It has been demonstrated that the housekeeping genes of M. tuberculosis exhibit a high degree of conservation and that genotypic discrimination of individual strains is possible by evaluation of insertion and repetitive elements. In particular, the DR locus is characteristic of the M. tuberculosis complex and consists of multiple tandem 36-bp repeats interspersed with variable spacers of about the same size (8, 33). The DR and the adjacent variable sequence form a direct variant repeat (DVR). Polymorphism of the DR locus (the absence or presence of single DVRs) has been exploited widely for the differentiation of strains of the M. tuberculosis complex by the spoligotyping method on the basis of 43 distinct DVRs (8, 26). Twenty-five additional DR spacers have recently been described (33), but use of these sequences has provided only slight improvement in the ability to discriminate among strains of M. tuberculosis (24, 33). Spoligotyping is less discriminatory than IS6110-based fingerprinting, especially for strains with high IS6110 copy numbers (1, 8, 26, 30), and is most suitable for the preliminary discrimination of strains. Subsequently, the strains with identical spoligoprofiles may be subtyped by IS6110 RFLP analysis, which is widely used as a standardized epidemiological typing technique (30, 32). The Beijing family of M. tuberculosis is recognized by specific IS6110 RFLP profiles: the DR locus, which consists of 15 units in virtually all strains; and the typical spoligoprofile, which consists of nine signals (1, 24, 33, 35). This genetic family, initially found to be endemic in the countries of East Asia (35), is marked by high transmissibility and is distributed worldwide (26). Previously, we showed its predominance in the northwestern region of Russia (16, 17); the Beijing family strains were identified in more than 50% of patients (about 450 strains examined from 1996 to 2001 [O. Narvskaya and I. Mokrousov, unpublished data]) by using IS6110 RFLP typing and spoligotyping. In the present study we compared the distribution of the katg S315T mutation in the Beijing family of strains versus that in strains of other genotypes. In our sample, the proportion of Beijing strains was 60% (123 of 204 INH r strains; Tables 2 and 3). This frequency was slightly higher than expected, but this may be explained by biased evaluation of INH r strains. Of note, the Beijing strains studied, even those differentiated by IS6110 RFLP analysis, was a closely related group (Fig. 3). The S315T substitution in katg was observed in 97.8% of INH r Beijing strains and in 84.6% of INH r non-beijing strains isolated from 1999 to 2001 and in 96.7 and 89.0% of strains, respectively, isolated over the entire study period, 1996 to 2001 (odds ratio, 3.6; 95% confidence interval, 1.0 to 14.6; Table 2). We also compared the distributions of the katg S315T mutation among Beijing and non-beijing INH r strains isolated from the subgroup of patients with new cases of TB (Table 2; Fig. 3). The katg 315ACC mutant allele was present in 100.0% (55 of 55) and 86.5% (32 of 37) of Beijing and non-beijing INH r strains, respectively, from patients with new cases of TB (Table 2). Our data obtained by IS6110 RFLP typing demonstrate that a majority of drug-resistant strains from patients with newly diagnosed cases belonged to the Beijing family and that all of the INH r strains had the katg S315T mutation (Fig. 3). These results confirm our previous observation that the epidemic spread of MDR TB in northwestern Russia is due to a greater extent to the clonal dissemination of MDR strains of the Beijing genotype than to the dissemination of strains of other genotypes (17). We assume that ongoing transmission of these strains could be the driving force of such a high prevalence of the katg S315T mutation. Generally, the Beijing family strains do not appear to be inherently MDR (1, 21, 30). In the present study, 10 of 39 (25.6%) pansusceptible strains, 4 of 10 (40%) STR-monoresistant strains, and 1 of 4 INH-monoresistant strains belonged to the Beijing type. However, the majority of these strains currently circulating in Russia are apparently highly transmissible and MDR. Our results suggest that strains of the Beijing genotype more readily acquire the S315T mutation in katg, but further studies are required to confirm this assumption. The evaluation of a limited number of gene codons in the genome of M. tuberculosis reliably predicts resistance to major drugs in the majority of M. tuberculosis strains, especially in areas of the world with a high prevalence of TB (34). For RIF, however, a minimum of three codons should be surveyed, and neither wild-type nor mutant alleles can be determined with any restriction endonuclease (22, 28). In contrast, analysis of a single codon (katg codon 315) will identify a majority of INH r isolates in countries with a high prevalence of MDR TB. Methods described so far for the detection of changes in katg codon 315 include DNA sequencing (5, 6, 9, 12, 13), single-strand conformation polymorphism analysis (20, 29), and cleavase fragment length polymorphism analysis (2) assays, which permit surveillance for all katg mutations, and dot blot hybridization (34, 36) and HapII (or its isoschizomers like MspI) digestion (4, 7, 31), which identify specific katg mutations. It should be noted that the use of single-strand conformation polymorphism analysis for the screening of katg for mutations in one case failed to reveal the S315T mutation due to the inappropriate positioning of the PCR primers, which resulted in an underestimation of the prevalence of this mutation (20, 37). Other primer pairs have been used to amplify a larger portion of katg and to detect simultaneously mutations in katg codons 315 and 463 by PCR-RFLP analysis (7, 31). However, it is accepted that variation in codon 463 presents a natural polymorphism unrelated to INH resistance (22). Therefore, we did not study this site in katg. In conclusion, the katg S315T mutation can serve as a reliable marker for the detection of INH resistance in M. tuberculosis isolates in northwestern Russia. The PCR-RFLP assay that we have described is rapid, easy to perform, and easy to

VOL. 46, 2002 KatG315 SUBSTITUTION IN INH r M. TUBERCULOSIS 1423 interpret. Furthermore, the procedure is inexpensive and requires standard PCR and electrophoresis equipment and can therefore be implemented in many of the clinical microbiology laboratories in northwestern Russia and other regions with a high incidence of TB where this mutation is predominant. Detection of INH resistance by this rapid genetic approach should facilitate the appropriate and timely delivery of antituberculous therapy. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS We thank Anna Vyazovaya for technical assistance. We thank Christophe Sola for use of his spoligotype database for comparison. We are grateful to Alessandra Riva for critical reading of the manuscript and English-language corrections. We also acknowledge two anonymous reviewers for their valuable comments and suggestions. This study was partly supported by the Reseau International des Instituts Pasteur et Instituts Associes, Institut Pasteur, Paris, France, and by the International Atomic Energy Agency (research contract no. 9924). REFERENCES 1. Beggs, M. L., K. D. Eisenach, and M. D. Cave. 2000. Mapping of IS6110 insertion sites in two epidemic strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. J. Clin. Microbiol. 38:2923 2928. 2. Brow, M. A., M. C. Oldenburg, V. Lyamichev, L. M. Heisler, N. Lyamicheva, J. G. Hall, N. J. Eagan, D. M. Olive, L. M. Smith, L. Fors, and J. E. Dahlberg. 1996. Differentiation of bacterial 16S rrna genes and intergenic regions and Mycobacterium tuberculosis katg genes by structure-specific endonuclease cleavage J. Clin. Microbiol. 34:3129 3137. 3. Cockerill, F. R., III. 1999. Genetic methods for assessing antimicrobial resistance. Antimicrob. Agents Chemother. 43:199 212. 4. Dobner, P., S. Rusch-Gerdes, G. Bretzel, K. Feldmann, M. Rifai, T. Loscher, and H. Rinder. 1997. Usefulness of Mycobacterium tuberculosis genomic mutations in the genes katg and inha for the prediction of isoniazid resistance. Int. J. Tuberc. Lung Dis. 1:365 369. 5. Escalante, P., S. Ramaswamy, H. Sanabria, H. Soini, X. Pan, O. Valiente- Castillo, and J. M. Musser. 1998. Genotypic characterization of drug-resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolates from Peru. Tuberc. Lung Dis. 79: 111 118. 6. Fang, Z., C. Doig, A. Rayner, D. T. Kenna, B. Watt, and K. J. Forbes. 1999. Molecular evidence for heterogeneity of the multiple-drug-resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis population in Schotland (1990 1997). J. Clin. Microbiol. 37:998 1003. 7. Haas, W. H., K. Schilke, J. Brand, B. Amthor, K. Weyer, R. B. Fourie, G. Bretzel, V. Sticht-Groh, and H. J. Bremer. 1997. Molecular analysis of katg gene mutations in strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex from Africa. Antimicrob. Agents Chemother. 41:1601 1603. 8. Kamerbeek, J., L. Schouls, A. Kolk, M. van Agterveld, D. van Soolingen, S. Kuijper, A. Bunschoten, H. Molhuizen, R. Shaw, M. Goyal, and J. D. A. van Embden. 1997. Simultaneous detection and strain differentiation of Mycobacterium tuberculosis for diagnosis and epidemiology. J. Clin. Microbiol. 35:907 914. 9. Kiepiela, P., K. S. Bishop, A. N. Smith, L. Roux, and D. F. York. 2000. Genomic mutations in the katg, inha, and ahpc genes are useful for the prediction of isoniazid resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolates from Kwazulu Natal, South Africa. Tuberc. Lung Dis. 80:47 56. 10. Kelley, C. L., D. A. Rouse, and S. L. Morris. 1997. Analysis of ahpc gene mutations in isoniazid-resistant clinical isolates of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Antimicrob. Agents Chemother. 41:2057 2058. 11. Lee, A. S. G., I. H. K. Lim, L. L. H. Tang, A. Telenti, and S. Y. Wong. 1999. Contribution of kasa analysis to detection of isoniazid-resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis in Singapore. Antimicrob. Agents Chemother. 43:2087 2089. 12. Marttila, H. J., H. Soini, E. Eerola, E. Vyshnevskaya, B. I. Vyshnevskiy, T. F. Otten, A. V. Vasilyef, and M. K. Viljanen. 1998. A Ser315Thr substitution in KatG is predominant in genetically heterogeneous multidrug-resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolates originating from the St. Petersburg area in Russia. Antimicrob. Agents Chemother. 42:2443 2445. 13. Marttila, H. J., H. Soini, P. Huovinen, and M. K. Viljanen. 1996. katg mutations in isoniazid-resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolates recovered from Finnish patients. Antimicrob. Agents Chemother. 40:2187 2189. 14. Mazars, E., S. Lesjean, A.-L. Banuls, M. Gilbert, V. Vincent, B. Gicquel, M. Tibayrenc, C. Locht, and P. Supply. 2001. High-resolution mini-satellitebased typing as a portable approach to global analysis of Mycobacterium tuberculosis molecular epidemiology. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 98:1901 1906. 15. Mdluli, K., D. R. Sherman, M. J. Hickey, B. N. Kreiswirth, S. Morris, C. K. Stover, and C. E. Barry III. 1996. Biochemical and genetic data suggest that InhA is not the primary target for activated isoniazid in Mycobacterium tuberculosis. J. Infect. Dis. 174:1085 1090. 16. Narvskaya, O., I. Mokrousov, E. Limeschenko, T. Otten, L. Steklova, O. Graschenkova, and B. Vyshnevskiy. 2000. Molecular characterization of Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains from northwestern region of Russia. Epi- North 1:22 24. 17. Narvskaya, O., I. Mokrousov, T. F. Otten, and B. I. Vyshnevskiy. 1999. Genetic marking of polyresistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains isolated in the north-west of Russia. Probl. Tuberk. N3:39 41. (In Russian.) 18. Perelman, M. I. 2000. Tuberculosis in Russia. Int. J. Tuberc. Lung Dis. 4:1097 1103. 19. Piatek, A. S., A. Telenti, M. R. Murray, H. El-Hajj, W. R. Jacobs, Jr., F. R. Kramer, and D. Alland. 2000. Genotypic analysis of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in two distinct populations using molecular beacons: implication for rapid susceptibility testing. Antimicrob. Agents Chemother. 44:103 110. 20. Pretorius, G. S., P. D. van Helden, F. Sirgel, K. D. Eisenach, and T. C. Victor. 1995. Mutations in katg gene sequences in isoniazid-resistant clinical isolates of Mycobacterium tuberculosis are rare. Antimicrob. Agents Chemother. 39:2276 2281. 21. Prodinger, W. M., P. Bunyaratvej, R. Prachaktam, and M. Pavlic. 2001. Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolates of Beijing genotype in Thailand. Emerg. Infect. Dis. 7:483. 22. Ramaswami, S., and J. M. Musser. 1998. Molecular genetic basis of antimicrobial agent resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Update. Tuberc. Lung Dis. 79:3 29. 23. Rozwarski, D. A., G. A. Grant, D. H. R. Barton, W. R. Jakobs Jr., and J. C. Sacchettini. 1998. Isoniazid modifies the NADH of its target enzyme (InhA) from Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Science 279:98 102. 24. Sebban, M., I. Mokrousov, N. Rastogi, and C. Sola. 2002. A data-mining approach to spacer oligonucleotide typing of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Bioinformatics 18:235 243. 25. Slayden, R. A., and C. E. Barry III. 2000. The genetics and biochemistry of isoniazid resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Microbes Infect. 2:659 669. 26. Sola, C., I. Filliol, M. C. Guttieres, I. Mokrousov, V. Vincent, and N. Rastogi. 2001. Spoligotype database of Mycobacterium tuberculosis: biogeographic distribution of shared types and epidemiologic and phylogenetic perspectives. Emerg. Infect. Dis. 7:390 396. 27. Sreevatsan, S., X. Pan, Y. Zhang, V. Deretic, and J. M. Musser. 1997. Analysis of the oxyr-ahpc region in isoniazid-resistant and -susceptible Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex organisms recovered from diseased humans and animals in diverse localities. Antimicrob. Agents Chemother. 41: 600 606. 28. Telenti, A., P. Imboden, F. Marchesi, D. Lowrie, S. Cole, M. J. Colston, L. Matter, K. Schopfer, and T. Bodmer. 1993. Detection of rifampicin-resistance mutations in Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Lancet 341:647 650. 29. Temesgen, Z., K. Satoh, J. R. Uhl, B. C. Kline, and F. R. Cockerill III. 1997. Use of polymerase chain reaction single strand conformation polymorphism (PCR-SSCP) analysis to detect a point mutation in the catalase-peroxidase gene (katg) of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Mol. Cell. Probes 11:59 63. 30. Tuyen, L. T. K., B. K. Hoa, H. M. Ly, L. N. Van, N. T. N. Lan, D. Chevrier, and J.-L. Guesdon. 2000. Molecular fingerprinting of Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains isolated in Vietnam using IS6110 as probe. Tuberc. Lung Dis. 80:75 83. 31. Uhl, J. R., G. S. Sandhu, B. C. Kline, and F. R. Cockerill III. 1996. PCR- RFLP detection of point mutations in the catalase-peroxidase gene (katg)of Mycobacterium tuberculosis associated with isoniazid resistance, p. 144 149. In D. Persing (ed.), PCR protocols for emerging infectious disease. ASM Press, Washington, D.C. 32. van Embden, J. D. A., M. D. Cave, J. T. Crawford, J. W. Dale, K. D. Eisenach, B. Gicquel, P. Hermans, C. Martin, R. McAdam, T. M. Shinnik, and P. M. Small. 1993. Strain identification of Mycobacterium tuberculosis by DNA fingerprinting: recommendations for a standardized methodology. J. Clin. Microbiol. 31:406 409. 33. van Embden, J. D. A., T. Van Gorkom, K. Kremer, T. Jansen, B. A. M. van der Zeijst, and L. M. Schouls. 2000. Genetic variation and evolutionary origin of the direct repeat locus of Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex bacteria. J. Bacteriol. 182:2393 2401. 34. van Rie, A., R. Warren, I. Mshanga, A. M. Jordaan, G. D. van der Spuy, M. Richardson, J. Simpson, R. P. Gie, D. A. Enarson, N. Beyers, P. D. van Helden, and T. C. Victor. 2001. Analysis for a limited number of gene codons can predict drug resistance of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in a high-incidence community. J. Clin. Microbiol. 39:636 641. 35. van Soolingen, D., L. Qian, P. E. W. de Haas, J. T. Douglas, H. Traore, F. Portaels, H. Z. Quing, D. Enkhasaikan, P. Nymadawa, and J. D. A. van Embden. 1995. Predominance of a single genotype of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in countries of East Asia. J. Clin. Microbiol. 33:3234 3238. 36. Victor, T., A. M. Jordaan, A. van Rie, G. D. van der Spuy, M. Richardson, P.D. van Helden, and R. Warren. 1999. Detection of mutations in drug

1424 MOKROUSOV ET AL. ANTIMICROB. AGENTS CHEMOTHER. resistance genes of Mycobacterium tuberculosis by a dot-blot hybridization strategy. Tuberc. Lung Dis. 79:343 348. 37. Victor, T. C., G. S. Pretorius, J. V. Felix, A. M. Jordaan, P. D. van Helden, and K. D. Eisenach. 1996. katg mutations in isoniazid-resistant strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis are not infrequent. Antimicrob. Agents Chemother. 40:1572. 38. Viljanen, M. K., B. I. Vyshnevskiy, T. F. Otten, E. Vyshnevskaya, M. Marijamaki, H. Soini, P. J. Laippala, and A. V. Vasilyef. 1998. Survey of drugresistant tuberculosis in northwestern Russia from 1984 through 1994. Eur. J. Clin. Microbiol. Infect. Dis. 17:177 183. 39. World Health Organization. 1998. Laboratory services in tuberculosis control. Part III. Culture, p. 77. World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland. 40. World Health Organization. 1993. Treatment of tuberculosis. Guidelines for national programs. World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland.